My sister Jeanette's birthday is a great reason to make a number of summer salads. Back in the beginning of the bakery, she would work with me the weeks her husband worked in Alaska. I start thinking of those days and decide to revisit some of the salads. Why not? They are timeless, tasty and I'm up for a trip down memory lane.

My mom, after she retired, was a fixture on Fridays at the bakery. She owns a zillion cookbooks, many purchased from the local Goodwill store. There is a series of cookbooks by James McNair circa the 1980's. Each recipe has a photo, each book pertains to a specific food group; rice, salads, fish, salmon, etc. They are pretty fabulous books and I snatch them up at second-hand stores whenever I see them. I am definitely inspired by James McNair when it comes to salads.

This is one of his salads although I think the recipe calls for orzo. Jeanette is on a gluten-free diet so I opt for rice. I use saffron and keep it light and fragrant. The recipe also calls for tumeric but I pull it back a tad. I don't want to mask the saffron flavor for bolder color. I also switch the dried cranberries for dried cherries; good call! Feeling cheap, I leave out the pine nuts....at $20 a bag; forget it. No one misses them. This is truly a beautiful salad and a notch up from the usual potato or pasta salads.

Kosher Status:

Parve

Number of servings:

10 -12

Main Ingredient(s):

Rice ~ Basmati

Preparation Time:

00:20

Cooking Time:

00:20

Skill Level:

1 - Easy (1 Easy - 5 Hard)

Estimated POINT value:

Ingredients:

1 pound (about 2 cups) basmati rice

1/4 teaspoon saffron

2/3 cups toasted pine nuts, optional

1/2 cup currants

1/2 cup dried cherries (or cranberries)

1/4 cup chopped fresh mint

1/4 cup chopped fresh parsley

3 tablespoons chopped fresh cilantro

Dressing:

1/2 cup olive oil

2 teaspoons minced fresh garlic

2 tablespoons fresh lemon juice

1/4 teaspoon cumin

1/4 teaspoon ground tumeric

1 teaspoon sugar

1 teaspoon salt

1/2 teaspoon pepper

Steps:

Rinse the rice in a medium sauce pan. Add water to the first joint of the middle finger when you balance your finger on the top of the rice. Add the saffron. Bring the rice to a boil and then turn to medium low until the rice is cooked.

Gently fluff the rice.

Turn the rice out of the pot onto a cookie sheet. Spread out to cool.

As the rice cooks, combine the dried cherries and currants in a small bowl. Wet with just enough water to help plump the fruit.

Prep the herbs. Make the dressing by combining the ingredients in a measuring cup.